-'7... / INItHIB UiilUii ' ® :I(S ^ ait I ired MS ru i.m. Population Greater King*; Mountain 10,320 City Limits 8,256 This fiffurs fox Greater Kings Mountcdn is derived from the 19SS Kings Mountain city dirsctorr ceiuus. The dty limits ttgure is from the United States census ol 1985. •w». ^ Kings Mountain's Reiiable Newspaper Pages Today VOL. 77 No. 28 Established 1889 Kings Mountain, N. C., Thursday, July 14, 1966 Seventy-Seventh Year PRICE TEN CENTS Community Clean-Up Campaign Continued Month Out-of-District Pupils Notified V PRESIDENT — Wilson Griffin, Kings Mountain druggist and partner in Griffin Drug Com pany, has been installed os president of the Kings Moun- toin Rotary Club for the com ing year. He succeeds Devere Smith. Lany Melton. 24 Dies Of Bums Larry Melton, 24, died Friday from burns he suffered through electptfcution May 29th. The fihal riteawere held in Waxhaw, N. C. Melton, an employee of Hunter Walden Company of Charlotte, was burned while working on a still-energized 44,000 volt power line which runs from the Duke Power 99 Islands plant near Blacksburg, S. C. into Kings Mountain. The' location where Melton was working was near the entrance to the Kings Moun tain National Military Park. He was rescued after more than two hours by D. C. Owens, an employee of D_ C. Ballcnger Company of Spartanbung, S. C.. who was able to reach him with a hydraulic bucket lift. Grover Rescue Squad ambulances car ried him to Kings Mountain hos pital and subsequently to Char lotte Memorial hospital where he had remained in critical condi tion. Mr. Melton was .married. Head-On Clash Kills Railman J. W. Pait, about 50, of 600 Sr Wilmington street. Hamlet, N. C., was killed Wednesday about 12:45 in the wreckage of two Seaboard freight trains which collided head-on about two miles east of Cherryville near Way- side End. W. H. Strong, Jr., of Hamlet, and Willis Dreading of Sanford were both listed in fair condition at Crowell hospital in Lincoln- ton, according to Carpenter" Funeral Home, Cherryville, which carried a third man, Gar- la ndStutz, of- Hamlet,- ta Gam^ ble hospital in* Lincolnton and subsequently to Charlotte Me- morfal hospital. ( A spokesman for the funeral home said Stutz was listed in serious condition. Funeral arrangements for Pait arc incomplete but will te an nounced by Wilson & Farrington Funeral Home of Hamlet. First reports said that the en gines of ‘both trains overturned and Immediately burst into flames. Both trains were report edly traveling at ^ high rate of speed. Rescuers pulled three men from the wreckage and rescued the fatally Injured man around 1:30. Several hundred spectators trampled fields of crops along the i1ght-6f-way. Rescue Squads and fire de partments from neighboring counties were called to the scene. Volunteers wore still working cleaning up the debris late Wed nesday afternoon. Admittance Vfill Depend. On Releases Notices are being mailed par ents of Kings Mountain school district students residing in oth-1 er counties that they will not be acceped for enrolment during the; upcoming term unless they ob tain releases from the board of education where, by residence, the out-qf-district students would normally attend. With few, if any exceptions the problem, which Superinten dent B. N. Barnes says is a legal one, involves neighboring Gaston I county pupils numbering from 50 to 100, normally in the e'duca-| tional menage of the Gaston i County Board of education. I The Kings Mountain board of education took the action at last week’s meeting. Supt. Barnes said he is notify ing Chairman John R. Rankin, of the Gaston board, of the board! action and accompanying notice. Some Kings Mountain district students attend Gaston county schools, Supt. Barnes noted, but their requests for releases have always been granted. "It’s not that Kings Mountain district has objection to teach ing these fine pupils,’* Supt. Barnes commented, “but legally we don’t have the authority without their formal release.” This district, Shelby district, and the Cleveland county district customarily foramlize releases of pupils when they-wish to attend out-of-district schools. B.R. Willeford Rites Conducted IT Retired Rail Conductor Dies After Thrombosis Funei'al rites for Bennc'tt Ru fus Willeford, Sr., 82. were iKki Monday at 11 a.m. .feinr I'irst Baptist chureh, interment follow in.g in Mountain Rest '•emetery. Mr Willeford, who ndired in 1955 after 53 years as a eonduct- or for Southern Railway..System, died at 1 p.m. Saturday in the Kings Mjuntaiit hospital follow ing two month’s illness. Mr. Willeford li.a d suffered a I stroke and wasi hospitalized. He 1 had improved Ad was able to I return home_ 1% o weeks a.go he suffered a massive cerebral I thrombosis which caused his | I death. ! I He was a native of Kings j Mountain and attended school; here and in Gastonia. He w;7s a one-time groein- and operated a cafe here at oiu- time. A former re. i